Writer-director Angela Robinson first came to the story of William Moulton Marston, Elizabeth Marston and Olive Byrne more than eight years ago as, in her words, “a straight-up Wonder Woman fan.” This was well before the recent rush of books on the origins of the character and certainly without any idea that her project on the three of them would come out in the wake of the landmark success of a “Wonder Woman” movie.
Robinson’s “Professor Marston and the Wonder Women,” which Annapurna Pictures is releasing in October, tells the story of how William Marston, a psychologist, came to create the character of Wonder Woman and the earliest incarnations of the comic and also of the unconventional life he led with his wife, Elizabeth, and their mutual girlfriend, Olive.
The central trio of performers of Luke Evans, Rebecca Hall and Bella Heathcote have an electric chemistry among them, giving the film a lively, unpredictable energy that is by turns romantic, sensual and defiant.
Robinson thought at first she was researching the story of a man, his wife and his mistress but she soon discovered their dynamic was deeper than that. Elizabeth Marston and Olive Byrne stayed together for 38 years after the death of William Marston in 1947.